Syria peace talks face major obstacles as fallout spreads across Middle East
The January 22 start of landmark Syria peace talks in Geneva will be difficult to keep as the war worsens and fallout spreads across the Middle East, analysts said.
“At long last and for the first time, the Syrian government and opposition will meet at the negotiating table instead of the battlefield,” said UN leader Ban Ki-moon as he announced the date.
The conference would be the “best opportunity” to halt the bloodshed, according to US Secretary of State John Kerry, whose country helped broker the meeting with the UN and Russia.
But few observers see any chance of dousing the wildfires turning Syria into an inferno of conflict.
The conference guest list is not agreed, the international powers are divided and cannot control the carnage and bitterness between President Bashar al-Assad and the fractured Syrian opposition runs deep.